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Introduction to Management

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Title: Introduction to Management Author: College of Business Last modified by: ABC Created Date: 9/8/2005 6:29:49 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Management


1
Introduction to Management
  • Chapter 1

2
Topics
What is management? What do managers do? What
challenges do managers at different levels face?
3
Management is
1
4
Management Functions
2
5
Levels of Management
Top Level Management
Middle Level Management
First-Line Management
3
6
What Companies Look for in Managers
5
7
Top Managers
3.1
8
Middle Managers
3.2
9
First-Line Managers
3.3
10
Team Leaders
3.4
11
The Evolution of Management Theory
12
Job Specialization the Division of Labor
  • Adam Smith (18th century economist)
  • Observed that firms manufactured pins in one of
    two different ways
  • Craft-styleeach worker did all steps.
  • Productioneach worker specialized in one step.
  • Realized that job specialization resulted in much
    higher efficiency and productivity
  • Breaking down the total job allowed for the
    division of labor in which workers became very
    skilled at their specific tasks.

13
F.W. Taylor and Scientific Mgt
  • Scientific Management
  • The systematic study of the relationships between
    people and tasks for the purpose of redesigning
    the work process for higher efficiency.
  • Defined by Frederick Taylor in the late 1800s to
    replace informal rule of thumb knowledge.
  • Taylor sought to reduce the time a worker spent
    on each task by optimizing the way the task was
    done.

14
Four Principles of Scientific Mgt
  • Principles to increase efficiency
  • Study the ways jobs are performed now and
    determine new ways to do them.
  • Gather detailed time and motion information.
  • Try different methods to see which is best.
  • Codify the new methods into rules.
  • Teach to all workers the new method.
  • Select workers whose skills match the rules.
  • Establish fair levels of performance and pay a
    premium for higher performance.
  • Workers should benefit from higher output

15
Problems with Scientific Management
  • Managers frequently implemented only the
    increased output side of Taylors plan.
  • Workers did not share in the increased output.
  • Specialized jobs became very boring, dull.
  • Workers ended up distrusting the Scientific
    Management method.
  • Workers could purposely under-perform.
  • Management responded with increased use of
    machines and conveyors belts.

16
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth
  • Refined Taylors work and made many improvements
    to the methodologies of time and motion studies.
  • Time and motion studies
  • Breaking up each job action into its components.
  • Finding better ways to perform the action.
  • Reorganizing each job action to be more
    efficient.
  • Also studied worker-related fatigue problems
    caused by lighting, heating, and the design of
    tools and machines.

17
Administrative Management Theory
  • Administrative Management
  • The study of how to create an organizational
    structure that leads to high efficiency and
    effectiveness.
  • Max Weber
  • Developed the concept of bureaucracy as a formal
    system of organization and administration
    designed to ensure efficiency and effectiveness.

18
Webers Five Principles of Bureaucracy
  • Authority is the power to hold people accountable
    for their actions.
  • Positions in the firm should be held based on
    performance, not social contacts.
  • Position duties are clearly identified so that
    people know what is expected of them.
  • Lines of authority should be clearly identified
    such that workers know who reports to who.
  • Rules, standard operating procedures (SOPs), and
    norms guide the firms operations.

19
Fayols Principles of Management
  • Division of Labor allows for job specialization.
  • Fayol noted jobs can have too much specialization
    leading to poor quality and worker
    dissatisfaction.
  • Authority and Responsibility
  • Fayol included both formal and informal authority
    resulting from special expertise.
  • Unity of Command
  • Employees should have only one boss.
  • Line of Authority
  • A clear chain of command from top to bottom of
    the firm

20
  • Centralization
  • The degree to which authority rests at the top of
    the organization.
  • Unity of Direction
  • A single plan of action to guide the
    organization.
  • Equity
  • The provision of justice and the fair and
    impartial treatment of all employees.
  • Order
  • The arrangement of employees where they will be
    of the most value to the organization and to
    provide career opportunities.
  • Initiative
  • The fostering of creativity and innovation by
    encouraging employees to act on their own

21
  • Discipline
  • Obedient, applied, respectful employees are
    necessary for the organization to function.
  • Remuneration of Personnel
  • An equitable uniform payment system that
    motivates contributes to organizational success.
  • Stability of Tenure of Personnel
  • Long-term employment is important for the
    development of skills that improve the
    organizations performance.
  • Subordination of Individual Interest to the
    Common Interest
  • The interest of the organization takes precedence
    over that of the individual employee.
  • Esprit de corps
  • Comradeship, shared enthusiasm foster devotion to
    the common cause (organization).

22
Behavioral Management Theory
  • Behavioral Management
  • The study of how managers should behave to
    motivate employees and encourage them to perform
    at high levels and be committed to the
    achievement of organizational goals.
  • Focuses on the way a manager should personally
    manage to motivate employees.

23
Behavioral Management
  • Mary Parker Follett
  • An influential leader in early managerial theory
  • Held a horizontal view of power and authority in
    organizations
  • Suggested workers help in analyzing their jobs
    for improvementsthe worker knows the best way to
    improve the job.
  • If workers have relevant knowledge of the task,
    then they should control the task.

24
Theory X and Theory Y
  • Douglas McGregor proposed the two different sets
    of assumptions about workers.
  • Theory X assumes the average worker is lazy,
    dislikes work and will do as little as possible.
  • Managers must closely supervise and control
    through reward and punishment.
  • Theory Y assumes workers are not lazy, want to do
    a good job and the job itself will determine if
    the worker likes the work.
  • Managers should allow workers greater latitude,
    and create an organization to stimulate the
    workers.

25
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26
Management Science Theory
  • An approach to management that uses rigorous
    quantitative techniques to maximize the use of
    organizational resources.
  • Quantitative managementutilizes linear
    programming, modeling, simulation systems.
  • Operations managementtechniques to analyze all
    aspects of the production system.
  • Total Quality Management (TQM)focuses on
    improving quality throughout an organization.
  • Management Information Systems (MIS)provides
    information about the organization.

27
Organizational Environment Theory
  • Organizational Environment
  • The set of forces and conditions that operate
    beyond an organizations boundaries but affect a
    managers ability to acquire and utilize
    resources.

28
The Open-Systems View
  • Open System
  • A system that takes resources for its external
    environment and converts them into goods and
    services that are then sent back to that
    environment for purchase by customers.
  • Inputs the acquisition of external resources.
  • Conversion the processing of inputs into goods
    and services.
  • Output the release of finished goods into the
    environment.

29
The Organization as an Open System
30
Other System Considerations
  • Closed system
  • A system that is self-contained and thus not
    affected by changes occurring in its external
    environment.
  • Often undergoes entropy and loses its ability to
    control itself, and fails.
  • Synergy
  • Performance that results when individuals and
    departments coordinate their actions
  • Performance gains of the whole surpass the sum of
    the performance of the individual components.

31
Contingency Theory
  • Contingency Theory
  • The idea that the organizational structures and
    control systems manager choose depend onare
    contingent oncharacteristics of the external
    environment in which the organization operates.
  • Assumes there is no one best way to manage.
  • The environment impacts the firm and managers
    must be flexible to react to environmental
    changes.
  • In rapidly changing organizational environments,
    managers must find ways to coordinate different
    departments to respond quickly and effectively.

32
Contingency Theory of Organizational Design
33
Mechanistic and Organic Structures
  • Mechanistic Structure
  • Authority is centralized at the top. (Theory X)
  • Employees are closely monitored and managed.
  • Can be very efficient in a stable environment.
  • Organic structure
  • Authority is decentralized throughout the
    organization. (Theory Y)
  • Tasks and roles are left ambiguous to encourage
    employees to react quickly to changing
    environment.

34
Managerial Roles
4
35
Mistakes Managers Make
6
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